Still, since I'm sure you can imagine a reasonable explanation for the discrepancy, there's no reason to think she lied.
If you want to make an argument for an alternative, then actually make it.
That is still direct experience of his behaviour. Indirect would be if someone described his statements to you.
So you're going with a semantic quibble about what counts as "direct", ignoring the fact that neither you nor they have ever actually interacted with Kavanaugh, and pretending as if actual interaction doesn't make any difference. Winner of an argument there, Belz.
No, the point, which I keep explaining to you, now for the fourth time, is that these legal experts know the sort of behaviour one must show in order to be an impartial judge.
But even that is wrong. First off, as I mentioned above, law professors have less experience with judges than trial lawyers, so if experience with judges is actually relevant then the petition wouldn't have been restricted to law profs. Second, people behave differently in different circumstances. To the extent that being a legal expert gives you unique insight into judicial behavior
in court, it
does not give you
any unique insight into the behavior of judges outside of court. And this was absolutely outside of court.
This is an appeal to authority fallacy. You can repeat it as many times as you want, but it will remain an appeal to authority fallacy.
Then the ABA's opinion is also irrelevant.
As I have pointed out and you ignored, the ABA's track record of evaluating judges demonstrates a capacity to do so fairly. This evaluation is limited in scope, and one can certainly have legitimate reason to oppose a nominee regardless of their rating. But it is still fundamentally a different sort of evaluation than this petition. If you want to dispute the ABA's track record, go ahead (but good luck). If you want to argue that Kavanaugh's faults lie outside the scope of their ratings, that's fine too. But you're not being remotely honest if you pretend it's exactly the same thing as this petition. It simply isn't.